Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Narges Jabbari

About

Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: August 22, 1979
Location of Killing: Behshahr, Mazandaran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Shooting
Charges: Adultery
Age at time of alleged offense: Under 18

About this Case

is among the very first women executed following the Islamic Revolution in Iran.

News of the execution of Mrs. Narges Jabbari, child of Fatemeh Nesa and Ahmad, was published in Keyhan newspaper on August 22, 1979. Additional information about this execution was obtained through Abdorrahman Boroumand Center interview with Mr. Jabbari’s family’s attorney who was a member of the Iranian Jurists Association 1 on February 28, 2019 (ABC interview), Jomhuri-e Eslami newspaper (August 25, 1979), Ettela’at newspaper (October 7 and 24, 1979), and an article by Mr. Iraj Mesdaqi on the “Neither Living Nor Dead” website on September 3, 2009.

Mrs. Jabbari was born in 1961 in the city of Behshahr, Mazandaran Province. Mrs. Jabbari was married and at the time of execution, she was under 18 years old (Keyhan newspaper).

International laws have strictly prohibited capital punishment for those who were under the age of 18 at the time of committing a crime. As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran has the obligation not to impose capital punishment for an offence committed before the age of eighteen.

In response to the news of Ms. Jabbari’s execution, Ayatollah Khomeini said: “maybe she got what she deserved.”

Ms. Jabbari’s case was related to sexual crimes in the city of Behshahr in 1979.

Arrest and detention

According to the attorney of Mrs. Jabbari’s family, the local residents reported that Mrs. Jabbari was arrested before noon on August 21, 1979 in the street in the city of Behshahr (ABC interview).

The circumstances of Mrs. Jabbari’s arrest and detention are not known.

Trial

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal in Behshahr tried Mrs. Jabbari in one session (Jomhuri-e Eslami newspaper).

Charges

The charges brought against Ms. Jabbari were “adultery(2) and illicit relationship” with a 22-year- old man (Keyhan and Jomhuri-e Eslami newspapers).

The validity of the criminal charges brought against these defendants cannot be ascertained in the absence of the basic guarantees of a fair trial. International human rights organizations have drawn attention to reports indicating that Islamic Republic authorities have brought trumped-up charges against their political opponents and executed them for alleged drug trafficking, sexual, and other criminal offences. Each year Iranian authorities sentence to death hundreds of alleged common criminals, following judicial processes that fail to meet international standards. The exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown.

Ms. Jabbari was under 18 years old at the time of execution.

Evidence of guilt

According to available information, the “explicit confession” made by Ms. Jabbari was used against her (Jomhuri-e Eslami newspapers).

Defense

According to the attorney of Mrs. Jabbari’s family, the local residents reported him that: “the girl (Mrs. Jabbari) was arrested, taken, and killed”. The local residents also claimed that in her childhood, Mrs. Jabbari had fallen from a height, which had caused her mental illness, and the accusation was false (ABC interview).

No information is available on Ms. Jabbari’s defense.

A summary of the defects of Ms. Narges Jabari’s Legal Proceedings

The following defects can be observed from the procedure and implementation of the sentence issued against Ms. Jabbari:

1) Adultery was not defined as a criminal offence in governing law at the time of the issuance of the sentence (the General Penal Code, and the Law on Amending for Articles 207 to 214 of the General Penal Code(3)).  In addition, according to the law, “misdemeanors and crimes against public chastity and marital responsibilities”, were not punished by execution. Therefore, the issuance and implementation of the death sentence against Ms. Jabbari was obviously in contradiction with the principle of legality.

According to the testimony of local residents, Ms. Jabbari had fallen from height which caused her mental illness and legal incapability.

2) The fact that Ms. Jabbari was under the age of 18 at the time when she was arrested, tried, and executed, was never taken into consideration by the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal in Behshahr.

3) There were serious doubts regarding Ms. Jabbari’s mental health, and the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal in Behshahr had not conducted any investigations in this regard.

4) According to local residents, Mrs. Jabbari was tried right after she was arrested, and the sentence was carried out immediately. This is in clear contradiction with her rights to defense, including the right to access to a lawyer, the right to visit and contact her family, the right to adequate time and facilities for the preparation of the defense, the right to request for a medical examination and obtain a medical report, the right to appeal to a court of higher jurisdiction and the right to seek pardon or commutation of sentence.

Judgment

The Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal in Behshahr sentenced Ms. Narges Jabbari to death. On August 22, 1979, at 3:00 AM, Ms. Jabbari was executed by firing squad (Keyhan newspaper).

The codefendant in this case was sentenced to 100 lashes, because he was not married (Jomhuri-e Eslami newspapers).

According to available information, Ms. Jabbari was pregnant at the time of execution (Ettela’at newspaper- October 7, 1979 and Mr. Iraj Mesdaqi’s article).

It was said that Ms. Jabbari was pregnant at the time of execution.

Reactions to Ms. Narges Jabbari’s execution

Mrs. Jabbari’s parents requested the Iranian Jurists Association to file a lawsuit on their behalf.  On October 21, 1979, the Iranian Jurists Association indicted the perpetrators in Mrs. Jabbari’s case. In a letter sent to the Minister of Justice by the Iranian Jurists Association, the defects in the case were described as follows:

“According to the letter dated on September 16, 1979 [from Mrs. Jabbari’s parents] to the Iranian Jurists Association, on August 22, 1979, their daughter was charged with adultery by the prosecutor’s office in Behshahr and sentenced to death by the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal and the sentence was carried out immediately. However, according to local residents, [Mrs. Jabbari] had fallen from a height, which had caused her mental illness and legal incapability. Secondly, the accusation is totally false. And finally, [Mrs. Jabbari] was under 18 years of age. In these respects, the issuance of the death sentence in such a case is contrary to the rules of Sharia and commonly-accepted practice and is against humanity” (Ettela’at newspaper- October 24, 1979).

Ms. Jabbari was charged with adultery by the prosecutor’s office in Behshahr and sentenced to death by the Islamic Revolutionary Tribunal. The sentence was carried out immediately.

Moreover, in an interview with Ayatollah Khomeini on 1979, Ms. Oriana Fallaci referred to the execution of Ms. Jabbari. Ms. Fallaci(4) questioned Ayatollah Khomeini about “the pregnant l8-year-old girl who was shot at Behshahr a few weeks ago, for adultery” and added “all the Iranian newspapers reported the news, and a debate was held on television because her lover was only given a hundred lashes.”  In response, Ayatollah Khomeini said: “If that is true, it means that she got what she deserved. What do I know? The woman must have done something more serious. Ask the court that condemned her. Stop talking about these things. I am getting tired…” (Ettela’at newspaper- October 7, 1979).

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1. Mr. Mohammad Reza Rohani was one of the lawyers of the Iranian Jurists Association who defended students at the Mazandaran Criminal Tribunals, defended students and several residents of Behshahr at the Behshahr Misdemeanor Courts, was a member of the investigation group on the murder of the leaders of Turkmen People’s party and mass murders of Gonbad-e Kavus, and filed and conducted investigations for Mrs. Narges Jabbari’s parents’ complaint. The Iranian Jurists Association indicted the perpetrators in Mrs. Jabbari’s case, but no information is available on the outcome of this complaint.
2. “Zina” is sexual relations between a man and a woman who are strangers to each other (outside the bonds of marriage), and, pursuant to the Islamic Penal Code, consists of two situations:
    1. Muhsen Zina (the equivalent of “adultery”) (the person who commits Zina is a man who has a permanent wife and has the possibility of having sexual relations with her) or Muhsena Zina (the person who commits Zina is a woman who has a permanent husband and has the possibility of having sexual relations with him);
    2. Non-Muhsen Zina (the equivalent of “fornication”, i.e. consensual sexual intercourse between a man and a woman not married to each other) (the person who commits Zina is a man who does not have a permanent wife) or Non-Muhsena Zina (the person who commits Zina is a woman who does not have a permanent husband).
The Hadd punishment for Muhsen or Muhsena Zina is death by stoning, and the Hadd punishment for Non-Muhsin or Non-Muhsina Zina is 100 lashes.
3. The General Penal Code is the first codified criminal law in Iran, passed by the National Consultative Assembly on January 13, 1926. This law was adopted from the penal Codes of France and Switzerland. Article 207 of the law, which included the death penalty for sodomy, adultery (muhsena zina), incest, and rape, was abolished on April 28, 1931, and the article that replaced it was revised on September 20, 1933. The law was revised in 1973 until it was completely abandoned in 1991 after the Islamic Penal Code was passed.
4. Oriana Fallaci was an Italian journalist, author, and political interviewer. She interviewed Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Yasser Arafat, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Ayatollah Khomeini, Indira Gandhi, Golda Meir, Hussein of Jordan, Muammar Gaddafi, George Habash, Henry Kissinger, and many others.

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